Michael Douglas and Alan Arkin mine aging for laughs in new limited Netflix series

By CURT SCHLEIER JTA news service

Alan Arkin, left, and Michael Douglas star in “The Kominsky Method,” the latest from “Big Bang Theory” creator Chuck Lorre. Photo by Mike Yarish/Netflix The Kominsky Method is the wisest and saddest new comedy on television. That might be its biggest problem.

The protagonist of the eight-episode Netflix series that debuted in November is Sandy Kominsky (played by Michael Douglas), a Jewish Tony Award-winning actor who landed with a thud in Hollywood. He no longer acts for a living but teaches the craft to students using the titular “method.”

Their friendship and the ways they navigate a hilarious and poignant battle against Father Time drive the show, which is moving and brave. Netflix has invested considerable effort in a series that likely will appeal to a limited demographic (Douglas, Arkin and show creator Chuck Lorre don’t come cheap).

The target audience is clearly of the older variety. At one point, Newlander says, “I wake up each morning and my first thought is, ‘What part of me isn’t working?’” At another, guest star Danny De- Vito, playing a urologist, snaps on rubber gloves and turns to examine a bent-over Kominsky while saying “You complete me.” Kominsky has been married three times and is finally happy about dating someone more his age.

Will millennials give this show a shot? Will AARP members take a chance on a series that is so deeply rooted in their own often depressing reality?

If they don’t, they will miss out on an extraordinary dramatic comedy television experience. In a season where most of the new sitcoms are virtually unwatchable – Murphy Brown isn’t quite what she used to be, and Rel is really bad – The Kominsky Method is uplifting in its intelligence.

Lorre, the Dick Wolf of comedy, is best known for more traditional TV sitcoms such as Two and a Half Men, Dharma & Greg and The Big Bang Theory.

But The Kominsky Method is different from his other shows – it’s much more personal and mature. The show’s two main characters are Jewish, also a first for the prolific Jewish writer and director.

Lorre is known for including vanity cards, or short essays and observations, at the end of his shows. They flash for just an instant, and hardcore fans pause the show to read them. In 2011, he wrote No. 327 from Israel, where he said he felt strangely at home.

“[F]or the first time in my life, I’m surrounded with DNA much like my own,” he wrote. “Until I got here … I didn’t realize how much my double helix yearned to be around similar strands.”

At one point he wonders, “Why did I spend a lifetime moving away from that group? How did Chaim become Chuck? How did Levine become Lorre?”

Except for a synagogue and shiva sequence, there isn’t much outwardly Jewish about The Kominsky Method. But Lorre’s particular strain of the double helix comes through more subtly in dialogue like Arkin’s declaration: “We’re civilized people. We keep our shame and suffering to ourselves, where it belongs.”

Douglas and Arkin’s comic timing is perfect, but their chemistry shines in darker moments as well. The rest of the excellent cast includes Jewish actress Lisa Edelstein (House) as Norman’s drug-addicted daughter Phoebe; Sarah Baker as Sandy’s level-headed daughter, Mindy; and Nancy Travis as Lisa, Sandy’s love interest. Edelstein particularly takes full advantage of every opportunity to go over the top.

In an early episode, Norman reminisces about Ron Howard’s classic movie Cocoon, which he recently viewed again.

“A spaceship is taking old people into space. That’s the happy ending for old people. I saw it 30 years ago,” he says. “But it’s a whole different perspective when you’re in the demographic.”

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